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Shakespeare’s Plays Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Jan 15, 2016

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Cory Bryant
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Page 1: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.
Page 2: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Shakespeare’s Plays

Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall

Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous elements

History: a play that chronicles the life of an English monarch

Page 3: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Tragedy and the Tragic Hero

Shakespeare’s tragedies are often called his “greatest plays.”

Every tragedy contains a “tragic hero”

Tragic hero: a main character who goes through a series of events that lead to his/her downfall

Page 4: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Qualities of a Tragic Hero

Possesses importance or high rank

Exhibits extraordinary talents

Displays a tragic flaw—an error in judgment or defect in character—that leads to downfall

Faces downfall with courage and dignity

Page 5: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Tragic Hero Cont.

Dramatic Foils- characters that are opposites or pitted against each other. The foil usually tried to prevent another character, usually the hero or protagonist, from doing something. He “foils” his plans.

 

Page 6: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Soliloquy and Aside Shakespeare uses soliloquies and asides even

though these are not things that are used in real life.

Soliloquy: a long speech given by a character while alone on stage to reveal his or her private thoughts or intentions. (monologue)

Aside: a character’s quiet remark to the audience or another character that no one else on stage is supposed to hear. A stage direction (often in brackets) indicates an aside

Page 7: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Aside Example

Trebonius: Caesar, I will. [Aside] And so near will I be

That your best friends shall wish I had been further.

The audience is meant to hear the aside, but not Caesar.

What does the aside suggest?

Page 8: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Dramatic Irony

Dramatic Irony: when the reader or audience knows something that one or more of the characters do not know.

How is dramatic irony used in horror movies?

Page 9: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Word Play PUNS – words with similar sounds but

different meanings.

I continually asked the track coach about joining the team but he just kept giving me the run-around.

Did you hear about the guy whose whole left side was cut off? He's all right now.

Page 10: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Word Play

OXYMORON – words with opposite meaning that are used together.

Original copy

Second best

Same difference

Easy payments

Work party

Page 11: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Word Play

SEXUAL DOUBLE ENTENDRES- common words with sexual connotation.

The photographer was disappointed because when he looked at the pictures of the cheerleading team, he realized they weren’t developed.

Page 12: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Word Play

AMBIGUITY – words that convey more than one meaning.

"Thanks for dinner. I’ve never seen potatoes cooked like that before."

(Jonah Baldwin in the film Sleepless in Seattle, 1993)

Page 13: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Word Play

MALAPROPISMS – words misused, usually humorously, because they happen to sound like other words.

"I resemble that remark!” (Instead of resent)

“Density has brought me to you.” (Instead of destiny)

Page 14: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Literary Term

Alliteration- the repeated occurrence of a consonant sound at the beginning of several words in the same phrase.

"Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers …"

Page 15: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

You got rhythm, but no rhyme!

Blank Verse is a type of poetry, distinguished by having a regular meter, but no rhyme.

Meter is the pattern of stressed or unstressed syllables.

Page 16: Shakespeare’s Plays  Tragedy: a play that traces the main character’s downfall  Comedy: a play that ends happily and usually contains many humorous.

Iambic Pentameter

The most common meter in English poetry, the so-called iambic pentameter, is a sequence of five iambic feet or iambs, each consisting of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one ("da-DUM") :

da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM